REMINDER: All investment, economics, and finance related material now appears at the new IaconoResearch.com. For the time being at least, this has become a personal blog covering a variety of mostly unrelated topics.

Damn! You never know what’s going to happen when you hit the refresh button since sometimes items like this one at ABC News get changed in ways that you don’t expect and it ruins everything. A big tip of the hat to EU for pointing me to Jake Tapper’s This Week interview with President Bill Clinton during which he laments listening to what is now clearly seen as bad advice about not regulating derivative markets back in the 1990s.

The funny thing is, a few hours ago there was a different UPDATE to the story at ABC News – something about someone from Clinton’s office calling back after the interview and blaming former Fed chief Alan Greenspan specifically. But, now there’s this politically correct wording in place of the old update that leaves me wanting.

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Hummers!

In this commentary in the weekend edition of the Wall Street Journal, magician/comedian Penn Jillette laments the passing of what will likely stand as one of the more iconic brands of the last decade and, to some, a way of life -  Hummers!

Recall that these monstrous SUVs (once also known as UAVs, or, Urban Assault Vehicles) were a popular topic here at this blog a few years back, that is, when gasoline cost less than two dollars a gallon and home prices were rising so fast that people didn’t know what to do with their new found wealth – so many of them bought Hummers.

Then it all came to an end, the first signs noted here in the classic Hummer Overfloweth.

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Volcanoes on Wall Street

In this report filed late yesterday, an anonymous economist at The Economist looks for deeper meaning in the fraud charges filed by the SEC against  Goldman Sachs while surely delighting in being able to quote Matt Taibbi and providing a handy link to the Rolling Stone article that puts this all into proper perspective.

The charges could hardly come at a worse time for Goldman. The firm has been under fire on a number of fronts, including over the handsome payout it secured from the New York Fed as a derivatives counterparty of American International Group, an insurer that almost failed in 2008. In a string of negative articles over the past year, Goldman has been accused of everything from double-dealing for its own advantage to planting its own people in the Treasury and other agencies to ensure that its interests were looked after. One profile memorably likened the firm to a “great vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity, relentlessly jamming its blood funnel into anything that smells like money.”

Goldman has continued to insist that it fared better than most of its rivals because of smart risk management, not because of any conflicts or duplicity. Its boss, Lloyd Blankfein, launched a vigorous defence of the firm’s practices in his recently published letter to shareholders.

But this week’s hammer-blow will unleash waves of Schadenfreude. Sceptics will say it confirms their suspicions that, for all the talk of helping its customers (Mr Blankfein used the words “client” or “clients” 56 times in his letter), Goldman puts its own interests, and those of favoured trading partners, first.

Its rivals should not feel too smug. The SEC has been working hard to beef up enforcement. The case is the first to be brought by its new structured-products group. It will not be the last. On a call with reporters, Mr Khuzami (of the SEC) said the team was looking at other instruments, some of them no doubt structured by other firms. Goldman’s rivals have long been envious of its prowess. Some of them may soon be empathising with its plight.

You have to wonder how much Taibbi’s article influenced the SEC and you also have to wonder if election year politics are somehow involved – it seems that everything is political when there’s a vote looming less than six months away and unemployment is at 10 percent.

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Eric Sprott on CNBC

Eric Sprott of Sprott Asset Management (who was unsuccessful in buying some of that IMF gold) talks to Maria Bartiromo about China, government spending,  and, of course, the  natural resource markets including the new Sprott Physical Gold Trust (NYSE:PHYS).

The new fund offers a number of intriguing features such as low tax rates and the option for physical delivery but, best of all, the custodian is the Royal Canadian Mint rather than JP Morgan or HSBC. As for stocks in general, he says he’s been “wrong since March of ‘09″ and doesn’t intend to change that view anytime soon.

Full Disclosure: No position in PHYS at time of writing

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More Tarnish on the Goldman Shine

Oh yeah, the other top news of the day is that Goldman Sachs, everyone’s favorite Wall Street firm, has been charged with fraud by the Securities and Exchange Commission – something having to do with subprime mortgages and derivatives, everyone’s favorite investment products of the last decade. Reuters has all the details in this report:

Goldman Sachs Group Inc was charged with fraud by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission over its marketing of a debt product tied to subprime mortgages that was designed to fail.

The lawsuit is the biggest crisis in years for Goldman, which emerged from the global financial crisis as Wall Street’s most influential bank.

The SEC alleged that Paulson & Co, a major hedge fund run by billionaire John Paulson, worked with Goldman in creating a collateralized debt obligation, and stood to benefit as its value fell, costing investors more than $1 billion. That is roughly the amount that Paulson is estimated to have made by betting against the CDO.

Robert Khuzami, head of the SEC’s enforcement division, said John Paulson was not charged because it was Goldman that made misrepresentations to investors, not him.

There’s lots more in the report including incriminating emails and some details about everyone’s new favorite Goldman Vice President, Fabrice Tourre, who was responsible for these products and also charged with fraud.

They’ve probably got the party hats out over at GoldmanSachs666.com.

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Consumer Sentiment Tumbles

More evidence that what the American consumer says and does can sometimes be two entirely different things comes with word of plunging consumer sentiment in April, this following Wednesday’s report of sharply higher retail sales just weeks before in March.

The Reuters/University of Michigan consumer sentiment index tumbled from 73.6 last month to just 69.5, the lowest reading since last October, back when the U.S. economy was still losing hundreds of thousands of jobs every month. Expectations fell from 67.9 to 62.3, their lowest level in a year, while the current conditions index fell from 81.4 to 80.7.

A rising stock market and more than 100,000 new jobs since last fall are apparently not enough to improve the mood of the consumer but, clearly, that doesn’t mean that they won’t go out and spend money anyway.

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